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— PAGE TWO — Student Budgets of SC UCLA Contrasted
Southern
DAILY
C^<=al ifornia
TROJAN
VOL. L
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1958
J
— PAGE THREE — SC's Aid to Handicapped Children Cited
NO. 46
Daily Bruin' Staff Still Blushing After SC's Issue Hits Westwood
FITZRANDOLPH:
Senate Structure Hinders Progress
(Editors Note: This is the first of a two part series on this \ear’s ASS( Senate by Dally Trojan reporter Joe Roberts. Today’s article deals with the weaknesses of SC’s student government. The ne\t will consider its accomplishments.)
Bv JOE ROBERTS
ASSC President Scott FitzRandolph, head of a 70-man SC student Senate, said that the main reason the Senate will not achieve its goal of making important and im-
Authority Sees End of British Gang Menace
The Teddy Boy gang menace i in England's big cities is expect-jed to pass as the teen-agers I grow older, the research direc-| lor for the British Home Office in London intimated here Friday.
Visiting the Youth Studies Center at SC to gain some “Yankee insight" into the problem of juvenile crime is Leslie
mediate decisions is because its organization is basically Wilkins of Great Britain.
Help
Hindman Tells Need of Skid-Rowites
(Editor's note: This is the first or h two-part series concerning slum and Skid-Row problems in Eos Angeles.)
By JUDY ASHKENAZY
Go down to Temple St., visit 1hc liars on Main St., lour 5th St. in downtown Los Angeles and \ou'll see the homeless, the destitute outcasts of society.
You're right around the corner from the Civic Center, you're on Skid-Row not a very pleasant place.
In pari its citizens are composed of men who ha\e met with society's ceaseless frustrations and have turned to alcohol for a solution, said Dr. Wilbert L. Hindman, professor of administration.
Dr. Hindman, secreiary of the Los Angelos chapter of the Volunteers of America, is in charge of that organization's service center on Skid-Row. Here the men come to wash their clothes, take a hot bath, receive counseling advice and. if they wish, aid in vocational placement.
Strides are b?ing taken in the rehabilitation of ihese men. however. Dr. Hindman reports that an attempt has ljeen made by the Los Angeles Police Department in their Saugus Rehabilitation Center.
Called the “country club for drunks.” the center is a very well run reasonably pleasant place for 600 men who are sent there for a three month sentence.
•Alter their sentence is up. these men are released with no money and little psychological counseling. Thus, odds favor them becoming, once again, nonsupporting members of Skid-Row." said Dr. Hindman.
"The grcatesl need.” he reports. "is for psychological counseling and vocational training tor the men who show desire to sta\ away from Skid-Row conditions."
Dr. Hindman hastens to point out that not all people living in the slum area are excessive chronic-drinkers. Some are tran-s'ents low on luck. For them, the Volunteers give job advice and baths if they want them. Many old, poor people on pensions who want to remain independent. find a home, of sorts, in this blighted area.
Tomorrow, the problems of these people will be considered.
wrong.
He outlined this criticism in three parts:
(1) There are too many voting senators.
(2) The president should not president over the Senate.
<3» There is no concrete definition about what the Senate
Prevent Repeat
Wilkins said in an interview recently that priority is being given to stopping first offenders from becoming second offenders.
: “If we can prevent an offender from becoming a repeater, we can solve 75 per cent of the serious crime problem,” he said. Wilkins continued with an ex
should do as a representative of planation of his hypothesis of the student bodv. solving the problem by saying
Too Many ^a| nearly all the serious ju-
“I feel that there are too Venile crime in England loday is many voting senators (there are committed by youths who have 3< voting seats on the Senate) had previous criminal experience, and consequently we have a du- j However, 80 percent of the first plication of voting; a dual repre- offenders don’t repeat if they sentation. FitzRandolph said, j are caught. The shock seems to The second point. FitzRan- S(0p them from attempting crim-dolph emphasized, is a personal ¡naj actions again. The remain-point of view. 'I feel that by, ¡ng 20 per cent who do repeat, being chairman and presiding are j|ie ones j^at Cause all the over the meeting, it handicaps trouble, he said, the president's program ~“J 1
and
w hat he w ants to put forth must wait while he keeps order.” “I’d like to see the president’s office represented as a speaking voice but I will not yield *he gavel everytime I want to ¿ay something.” he declared. ‘‘I feel business this disrupts the senatorial
activity and creates a trying situation,.
Big Ten (Continued from Page 1)
He gave examples of the Big Ten schools and said that at Michigan State the vice president is chairman of the senate.
“At this meeting, the president has a voice but no vote,” he said. “His role is one of advisor and he can form the pro-
Rat Packs
England never had a gang problem until the Teddy Boys ! appeared on the scene a few | years ago. The Teddy Boys can : be most likened to the rat packs | of this area in recent years, j Sociologists call them a “normal reaction,” but newspapers and | the public call them a “men-| ace.”
Teddy Boys, juvenile gangs i ranging in age from 17 to 21 years, haunt the streets of London and other large cities. They | wear tight trousers and long frock coats trimmed in velvet as worn in the days of Edward VII, from whence came the name i Teddy Boys. “Teddy” is the
gram he »ants without the in- Br|,Ush nickna,mf foru Ed"'ard Inference ot moderating a dis- and ,h<>, '»'I* ° drc's !hat ,he?" cushion ” gangs have adopted is termed
Thirdly, the constitution, he Edwardian. Wilkins explained, explained, does not give the in- War Generation
terpretation of what the Senate “The crimes that the gangs
should actually do. commit are mostly larccny,
Pursue Program breaking and entering and minor
“I would like to see the Senate assault. These young men were express their thoughts as they not born during our great de-did at IdyUwild but to do this I pression or during World War they must pursue t program,” II but grew7 up in those periods he said. —particularly the war.” Wilkins
Many of the senators meet; said, every other week, look at the Wilkins laid part of the blame agenda and then ask what are on environmental conditions and we going to do tonight, he said, part on lack of discipline. “It ap-“It is this incompleteness, this nears that the ages of and indefinite program, which often j 6 years is a critical period for hinders the Senate in its iegisla- children 1o be exposed to social tion.” lie added. events. Even more important, it
Other complaints of the pres-; .seems that the lack of a father ¡dent included the fact that the does more harm to a boy than president has no direct line of responsibility to any voting senator.
Only Suggests
“They (the senators) may theoretically do as they please.” he said. “I can only suggest to
Highly Spirited SC Rates Wide Choice
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DAILY BRUIN - ER - DaiLY TROJAN-Stu-
dents were still scouring campus today in search of some of the priceless fake Daily Bruins which were acclaimed as the biggest coup in the history of SC-UCLA rivalry. Pictured in the "Daily Bruin," which was
(Editor’s Note: This is the third in a series of articles by Daily Trojan reporter Nita Biss on the SC government contracts program.)
Bv NITA BISS
By JOE SALTZMAN
They said it couldn’t be done Out two Daily Trojan editors, one senator-at-large and 25 Squires proved that a fake Daily Bruin could be distributed on the UCLA campus.
And to substantiate this claim 8000 copies of the UCLA co;lege newspaper, filled with articles praising SC, ! were delivered ot the Bruin campus last Friday at 9 a.m! Homemade Bruin Writetn by Joe Jares and Garry Short, managing editor and sports editor of the Daily Trojan, and Larry Lich-ty. senator-at-large, the homemade Daily Bruin was sub-stituted for a special 12-page football edition and it included pictures of SC President Norman Topping, the Mc-keever Twins and Dr. Paul Saltman.
The newspaper found a ready market in Westwood. Wounded Uclan cries of “Somehow they did it,” “You can't trust anyone any more,” and “I guess it was SC that, did it,” carried around the hysteria-ridden campus and Daily Bruin editor, Tom Welsh, looked the "first edition” over and said in vengeance, “If we win the game, I'll reprint this word for word.”
Rumors, Rumors But on the SC campus, jubilant accounts of what had happened were being spread by demonstration, rumor and sotry-telling.
Dr. Topping extended his official congratulations on the feat; Dr Robert G. Gordon, dean of students, said that “even students and administration at UCLA agree that this was a real coup. It is in the realm of creative college buffonery.”
The printing fee of S213 for a 10,000-copy edition, was paid for by student groups on campus and after a one month writing period and a two-week scouting period, all the SC planning had been timed to the minute.
50-50 Chance
Lichty said that even with this exact timing and careful planning, “we felt that we had a 50-50 chance to deliver the newspaper and a 50-50 chance to get off the
campus.”
The plan, almost abandoned the night before because of a rumor that UCLA had found out about the idea, was put into operation early Friday morning at 4.
Squires Ken Crossman and Tim Clark managed to get a bundle of the Daily Bruins from Dixon-Bell Press, where both papers are printed. Through some fast talking, they assured the printers that “we were sent here to guard the Daily Trojans, not to take the Daily Bruins.” Some Authentic With this bundle, Lichty took 16 stacks of the SC-made Daily Bruin and put four copies of each authentic papers on top of these bundles.
Ken Ballard, dressed in a driver’s suit, took over as the driver of the UCLA newspaper delivery truck while the real driver was treated to breakfast on fraternity row.
Ballard, with the 16 bundles of “fake” Bruins in his delivery truck, went over to the Westwood campus.
Good Morning Following the original route of the driver, he entered the campus at 8:20, smiled at a policeman, handed him his morning Daily Bruin, received a cordial thank you, and proceeded towards the adminstration building.
Lichty was waiting there. He untied one of the bundles and took it inside the building.
“A squire was stationed at each distributing box,’* Lichty said, “in case of trouble, but there was no trouble and we were not even stopped.”
Regular Copies The first Bruin readers received regular copies of the doctors examined, they found 15 | completely controlled conditions paper at 8:45 while the rest of the student body received
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distributed on the Westwcod campus eariy last Friday morning, were Dr. Norman H. Topping, SC president, the McKeever twins and Bob (Tommy Trojan) Caswell. The paper was printed by a local printer, who matched the Bruin style exactly.
Hypertensive Rabbits Will Aid Cardiac Disease Investigations
of starting a colony derived j also showed a higher pressure ; from a group of high blood j than the females or the males j pressure animals,’’ he continued. ! in the first generation.
Out of 553 rabbits which the “The rabbit colony provides
j were systolic pressure of 160 or
The combined efforts of three more. These rabbits became the have made it j progenitors (ancestral species)
to be without his mother.” Crime Reasons Later, in a lacture delivered on the SC campus, Mr. Wilkins advanced the popular theory that the responsibility for crime and the eventual methods of
SC physiologists possible for investigators of heart disease to now study a group of spontaneously hypertensive animals.
Dr. Natalie Alexander, under the direction of Dr. Douglas Drury, has bred a colony of nat-
,1 , . t , i , .. ... . . , ... urallv hypertensive rabbits from
(hem but I can not make any- dealing with criminals are misdi- • i'nal pair which showed
body to anything. rected. !, . . /, ? t______
He emphasized that generally Mr. Wilkins said that society! *gh °° piessUre 1
this was all right with him hut is initially responsible for the ; Paien^ cause.
that he disliked the senator who! vast majority of criminal cases. Research Grants pressure
responsibly lies in The two doctors, along with j ^
casv - ! Dr. Lcrner B. Hinshaw. have
of the colony which has been continued since that time and has reached up to eight generations in some lines.
They then started a group of rabbits descended from normo-tensive animals. These are under the same conditions as the colony and serve as a control group. The colony animals are those descended from the orig-
under which the effects of drugs the SC-spirited edition, on hypertension can be studied," j ~A member of the Rally Committee took a thousand Dr. Drury said. of the Bruins and threw them in a waste basket,” Lichty
ihese animals have been sa.^ “Then two more guys took them out and started
treated with known hypotensive h d because o£ the demand £or
agents using their siblings as ! tY* ,,
untreated hypertensive con-! them. j t « „j u
trois.” he added. By noon, the real” Daily Bruin were delivered but
Preliminary studies
that blood pressure and heart rate are reduced indefinitely by a daily dose of a certain drug, whose name can be shortened to alseroxylon. When this drug was
comes to the Senate meeting for' Society's "self-glorification reasons." 1 making crime
Noon Readings To Feature H. L. Mencken’s Autopsy
II L. Mencken’s “Roosevelt: An Autopsy” will be read at today's noon readings by Dr. Harold Briggs, professor of English.
Today's reading, to l»e held in 129 FH. is the eighth in a series n( t^n programs sponsored by the SC English department un-der the direction of Dr. Bruce
R. McEMerry.
Henry Louis Mencken, a native of Baltimore. Md.. was n noted journalist, serving as a reporter on tl»e liallunore Morning 1 leraid and later as cily editor for the same paper.
He served as editor of the Evening Herald from 1905 to 1906 and on ihe sialf of the Baltimore Sun for many years.
Mencken was a prominent literary critic as well as editor of American Mercury magazine and a contributing editor for The Nation, another periodical.
He was awarded a gold medal for his criticisms and essays by the National Institute and Acad
emy of Arts and Letters. dent of the United States and
Mencken was the author of often remembered for his work countless literary works, among j in conservation and trust-bust-which are “The Philosophy of ing.
Fredrich Nietzsche.” “The Art-
i been conducting an investiga-| tion of hypertension on research j grants, one of which is from the U.S. Public Health Serv ice.
The doctors have definitely concluded that there is a hered-! itary factor in hypertension and | that the characteristic changes of blood pressure in spontane-
ously hypertensive animals are for his book “The American similar to the normal rabbit
Language," which is considered population.
by many to be a classic as far "These findings would indi-
cate that spontaneously hyper- I
inal lot selected for high blood ! discontinued after two months
; or a year of treatment, the Average Higher pressures went up to control
“The average pressure of the (hypertensive) levels or above
colony has been consistently tvv ‘ ¡n a week._____________________________
higher than that of ordinary rabbit population," Dr. Drury stated.
“Direct pressures are sometimes made using intra-arlerial puncture but routine pressures are measured by the direct method, using cuff and syphg-momanometer”—a standard instrument for measuring blood
showed were rapidly forgotten or traded for copies of the “earlier
edition.”
Real Surprise
“We had no idea that the plan would have worked so perfectly,” Lichty said .“There was no trouble at ail and no one seemed to know just what was happening.”
With the administration’s and student body's unanimous approval, the stunt was picked up by wire services, newspapers and radio television stations all over the country. ________________________
SC Needn't Fear Federal interference, Says Topping
University President Norman said, “that this bill is not a take up teaching as a career.
H. Topping said today that SC, scholarship, but a loan.” "There is a proviso in the bill
Many scientists have held the , as a private institution, need not The loans will be made to stu- wjj| refund practising teach-
(car the new “installment plan" dents at low <3 ^ ,“at’ Hers 10 per cent of their loan each
that Congress has passed to help terest rates. The Federal L»ov-|
for about seven or eight
pressure
------
as the English language is con- cate that spontaneously hyper-
sidered. i tensive rabbits have character- I belief that hjpei tension is a
The selection which Professor istics in common with man in ! genetic factor, hut their theory _
y Briggs will read today concerns his development of essential hy-| lacked proof until these rabbits students meet their college ex- ernment will contribute 90 per year, for about 1- Theodore Roosevelt 26th presi- pertension,” Dr. Drury conclud- "ere studied. penses. cent of the capital for these , years, he said.
— - * * ” ' ' —'1----......1 However, Dr, Topping pointed
out that the plan will not be re-
ed.
ist," “A Book of Burlesques,” and “A Book of Prefaces.” More of his works include “Making a President," “In Defense of Women.’’ “Ventures
“Roosevelt: An Autopsy” was written in 1926, during the middle of Mencken’s literary career.
Mencken was born in 1880 and died just two years ago. He was
into Verse," “Note on Democ- educated in Baltimore’s private racy." and “Newspaper Days.” schools and attended Baltimore Mencken is perhaps best-known i Polytechnic.
Stock Rabbits “In 1951 we found that occasional stock rabbits supplied us by rabbitries had definitely
higher arterial pressure than the average rabbit population,” Dr. Drurv explained.
Dr. Alexander’s first 85 rab- SC, he says, will soon begin funds: the university will give
bits showed an incidence of ele- participating in this plan under the remaining 10 per cent.
vated systolic pressure at four months of age, 30 per cent, and of 70 per cent at eight months.
Two additional generations born in 1954 showed an incidence of 50 per cent at four “We mated two such animals I months and To per cent at eight 3nd found elevated pressures in ¡months.
several of the offspring. This I In the newer generations the led us to screen rabbits in the males showed a higher pressure : sonnel.
stock producers with the view \ than the females. These males I “It should be emphasized," he
Defense Education Act of 1958. | Although the selection of stu-This legislation allows students dents for loans will be left to
to pay for their college tutition in monthly installments.
Dr. Topping said that acceptance of the act will not give to the government any policy control over the university’s curriculum, administration or per-
the university, the bill asks that special consideration be given to students with a superior academic background who express a desire to teach in elementary or secondary schools.
Dr. Topping said he felt that “Congress’s thinking” in the bill
stricted to students majoring in education only. He said that the bill will not overlook high school students, who are college material, that are denied college liecnuse they lack the necessary funds.
Graduate and undergraduarr students already attending SC will also be eligible for the bills
; was to encourage students to j benefits.

— PAGE TWO — Student Budgets of SC UCLA Contrasted
Southern
DAILY
C^<=al ifornia
TROJAN
VOL. L
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1958
J
— PAGE THREE — SC's Aid to Handicapped Children Cited
NO. 46
Daily Bruin' Staff Still Blushing After SC's Issue Hits Westwood
FITZRANDOLPH:
Senate Structure Hinders Progress
(Editors Note: This is the first of a two part series on this \ear’s ASS( Senate by Dally Trojan reporter Joe Roberts. Today’s article deals with the weaknesses of SC’s student government. The ne\t will consider its accomplishments.)
Bv JOE ROBERTS
ASSC President Scott FitzRandolph, head of a 70-man SC student Senate, said that the main reason the Senate will not achieve its goal of making important and im-
Authority Sees End of British Gang Menace
The Teddy Boy gang menace i in England's big cities is expect-jed to pass as the teen-agers I grow older, the research direc-| lor for the British Home Office in London intimated here Friday.
Visiting the Youth Studies Center at SC to gain some “Yankee insight" into the problem of juvenile crime is Leslie
mediate decisions is because its organization is basically Wilkins of Great Britain.
Help
Hindman Tells Need of Skid-Rowites
(Editor's note: This is the first or h two-part series concerning slum and Skid-Row problems in Eos Angeles.)
By JUDY ASHKENAZY
Go down to Temple St., visit 1hc liars on Main St., lour 5th St. in downtown Los Angeles and \ou'll see the homeless, the destitute outcasts of society.
You're right around the corner from the Civic Center, you're on Skid-Row not a very pleasant place.
In pari its citizens are composed of men who ha\e met with society's ceaseless frustrations and have turned to alcohol for a solution, said Dr. Wilbert L. Hindman, professor of administration.
Dr. Hindman, secreiary of the Los Angelos chapter of the Volunteers of America, is in charge of that organization's service center on Skid-Row. Here the men come to wash their clothes, take a hot bath, receive counseling advice and. if they wish, aid in vocational placement.
Strides are b?ing taken in the rehabilitation of ihese men. however. Dr. Hindman reports that an attempt has ljeen made by the Los Angeles Police Department in their Saugus Rehabilitation Center.
Called the “country club for drunks.” the center is a very well run reasonably pleasant place for 600 men who are sent there for a three month sentence.
•Alter their sentence is up. these men are released with no money and little psychological counseling. Thus, odds favor them becoming, once again, nonsupporting members of Skid-Row." said Dr. Hindman.
"The grcatesl need.” he reports. "is for psychological counseling and vocational training tor the men who show desire to sta\ away from Skid-Row conditions."
Dr. Hindman hastens to point out that not all people living in the slum area are excessive chronic-drinkers. Some are tran-s'ents low on luck. For them, the Volunteers give job advice and baths if they want them. Many old, poor people on pensions who want to remain independent. find a home, of sorts, in this blighted area.
Tomorrow, the problems of these people will be considered.
wrong.
He outlined this criticism in three parts:
(1) There are too many voting senators.
(2) The president should not president over the Senate.
<3» There is no concrete definition about what the Senate
Prevent Repeat
Wilkins said in an interview recently that priority is being given to stopping first offenders from becoming second offenders.
: “If we can prevent an offender from becoming a repeater, we can solve 75 per cent of the serious crime problem,” he said. Wilkins continued with an ex
should do as a representative of planation of his hypothesis of the student bodv. solving the problem by saying
Too Many ^a| nearly all the serious ju-
“I feel that there are too Venile crime in England loday is many voting senators (there are committed by youths who have 3< voting seats on the Senate) had previous criminal experience, and consequently we have a du- j However, 80 percent of the first plication of voting; a dual repre- offenders don’t repeat if they sentation. FitzRandolph said, j are caught. The shock seems to The second point. FitzRan- S(0p them from attempting crim-dolph emphasized, is a personal ¡naj actions again. The remain-point of view. 'I feel that by, ¡ng 20 per cent who do repeat, being chairman and presiding are j|ie ones j^at Cause all the over the meeting, it handicaps trouble, he said, the president's program ~“J 1
and
w hat he w ants to put forth must wait while he keeps order.” “I’d like to see the president’s office represented as a speaking voice but I will not yield *he gavel everytime I want to ¿ay something.” he declared. ‘‘I feel business this disrupts the senatorial
activity and creates a trying situation,.
Big Ten (Continued from Page 1)
He gave examples of the Big Ten schools and said that at Michigan State the vice president is chairman of the senate.
“At this meeting, the president has a voice but no vote,” he said. “His role is one of advisor and he can form the pro-
Rat Packs
England never had a gang problem until the Teddy Boys ! appeared on the scene a few | years ago. The Teddy Boys can : be most likened to the rat packs | of this area in recent years, j Sociologists call them a “normal reaction,” but newspapers and | the public call them a “men-| ace.”
Teddy Boys, juvenile gangs i ranging in age from 17 to 21 years, haunt the streets of London and other large cities. They | wear tight trousers and long frock coats trimmed in velvet as worn in the days of Edward VII, from whence came the name i Teddy Boys. “Teddy” is the
gram he »ants without the in- Br|,Ush nickna,mf foru Ed"'ard Inference ot moderating a dis- and ,h<>, '»'I* ° drc's !hat ,he?" cushion ” gangs have adopted is termed
Thirdly, the constitution, he Edwardian. Wilkins explained, explained, does not give the in- War Generation
terpretation of what the Senate “The crimes that the gangs
should actually do. commit are mostly larccny,
Pursue Program breaking and entering and minor
“I would like to see the Senate assault. These young men were express their thoughts as they not born during our great de-did at IdyUwild but to do this I pression or during World War they must pursue t program,” II but grew7 up in those periods he said. —particularly the war.” Wilkins
Many of the senators meet; said, every other week, look at the Wilkins laid part of the blame agenda and then ask what are on environmental conditions and we going to do tonight, he said, part on lack of discipline. “It ap-“It is this incompleteness, this nears that the ages of and indefinite program, which often j 6 years is a critical period for hinders the Senate in its iegisla- children 1o be exposed to social tion.” lie added. events. Even more important, it
Other complaints of the pres-; .seems that the lack of a father ¡dent included the fact that the does more harm to a boy than president has no direct line of responsibility to any voting senator.
Only Suggests
“They (the senators) may theoretically do as they please.” he said. “I can only suggest to
Highly Spirited SC Rates Wide Choice
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DAILY BRUIN - ER - DaiLY TROJAN-Stu-
dents were still scouring campus today in search of some of the priceless fake Daily Bruins which were acclaimed as the biggest coup in the history of SC-UCLA rivalry. Pictured in the "Daily Bruin," which was
(Editor’s Note: This is the third in a series of articles by Daily Trojan reporter Nita Biss on the SC government contracts program.)
Bv NITA BISS
By JOE SALTZMAN
They said it couldn’t be done Out two Daily Trojan editors, one senator-at-large and 25 Squires proved that a fake Daily Bruin could be distributed on the UCLA campus.
And to substantiate this claim 8000 copies of the UCLA co;lege newspaper, filled with articles praising SC, ! were delivered ot the Bruin campus last Friday at 9 a.m! Homemade Bruin Writetn by Joe Jares and Garry Short, managing editor and sports editor of the Daily Trojan, and Larry Lich-ty. senator-at-large, the homemade Daily Bruin was sub-stituted for a special 12-page football edition and it included pictures of SC President Norman Topping, the Mc-keever Twins and Dr. Paul Saltman.
The newspaper found a ready market in Westwood. Wounded Uclan cries of “Somehow they did it,” “You can't trust anyone any more,” and “I guess it was SC that, did it,” carried around the hysteria-ridden campus and Daily Bruin editor, Tom Welsh, looked the "first edition” over and said in vengeance, “If we win the game, I'll reprint this word for word.”
Rumors, Rumors But on the SC campus, jubilant accounts of what had happened were being spread by demonstration, rumor and sotry-telling.
Dr. Topping extended his official congratulations on the feat; Dr Robert G. Gordon, dean of students, said that “even students and administration at UCLA agree that this was a real coup. It is in the realm of creative college buffonery.”
The printing fee of S213 for a 10,000-copy edition, was paid for by student groups on campus and after a one month writing period and a two-week scouting period, all the SC planning had been timed to the minute.
50-50 Chance
Lichty said that even with this exact timing and careful planning, “we felt that we had a 50-50 chance to deliver the newspaper and a 50-50 chance to get off the
campus.”
The plan, almost abandoned the night before because of a rumor that UCLA had found out about the idea, was put into operation early Friday morning at 4.
Squires Ken Crossman and Tim Clark managed to get a bundle of the Daily Bruins from Dixon-Bell Press, where both papers are printed. Through some fast talking, they assured the printers that “we were sent here to guard the Daily Trojans, not to take the Daily Bruins.” Some Authentic With this bundle, Lichty took 16 stacks of the SC-made Daily Bruin and put four copies of each authentic papers on top of these bundles.
Ken Ballard, dressed in a driver’s suit, took over as the driver of the UCLA newspaper delivery truck while the real driver was treated to breakfast on fraternity row.
Ballard, with the 16 bundles of “fake” Bruins in his delivery truck, went over to the Westwood campus.
Good Morning Following the original route of the driver, he entered the campus at 8:20, smiled at a policeman, handed him his morning Daily Bruin, received a cordial thank you, and proceeded towards the adminstration building.
Lichty was waiting there. He untied one of the bundles and took it inside the building.
“A squire was stationed at each distributing box,’* Lichty said, “in case of trouble, but there was no trouble and we were not even stopped.”
Regular Copies The first Bruin readers received regular copies of the doctors examined, they found 15 | completely controlled conditions paper at 8:45 while the rest of the student body received
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distributed on the Westwcod campus eariy last Friday morning, were Dr. Norman H. Topping, SC president, the McKeever twins and Bob (Tommy Trojan) Caswell. The paper was printed by a local printer, who matched the Bruin style exactly.
Hypertensive Rabbits Will Aid Cardiac Disease Investigations
of starting a colony derived j also showed a higher pressure ; from a group of high blood j than the females or the males j pressure animals,’’ he continued. ! in the first generation.
Out of 553 rabbits which the “The rabbit colony provides
j were systolic pressure of 160 or
The combined efforts of three more. These rabbits became the have made it j progenitors (ancestral species)
to be without his mother.” Crime Reasons Later, in a lacture delivered on the SC campus, Mr. Wilkins advanced the popular theory that the responsibility for crime and the eventual methods of
SC physiologists possible for investigators of heart disease to now study a group of spontaneously hypertensive animals.
Dr. Natalie Alexander, under the direction of Dr. Douglas Drury, has bred a colony of nat-
,1 , . t , i , .. ... . . , ... urallv hypertensive rabbits from
(hem but I can not make any- dealing with criminals are misdi- • i'nal pair which showed
body to anything. rected. !, . . /, ? t______
He emphasized that generally Mr. Wilkins said that society! *gh °° piessUre 1
this was all right with him hut is initially responsible for the ; Paien^ cause.
that he disliked the senator who! vast majority of criminal cases. Research Grants pressure
responsibly lies in The two doctors, along with j ^
casv - ! Dr. Lcrner B. Hinshaw. have
of the colony which has been continued since that time and has reached up to eight generations in some lines.
They then started a group of rabbits descended from normo-tensive animals. These are under the same conditions as the colony and serve as a control group. The colony animals are those descended from the orig-
under which the effects of drugs the SC-spirited edition, on hypertension can be studied," j ~A member of the Rally Committee took a thousand Dr. Drury said. of the Bruins and threw them in a waste basket,” Lichty
ihese animals have been sa.^ “Then two more guys took them out and started
treated with known hypotensive h d because o£ the demand £or
agents using their siblings as ! tY* ,,
untreated hypertensive con-! them. j t « „j u
trois.” he added. By noon, the real” Daily Bruin were delivered but
Preliminary studies
that blood pressure and heart rate are reduced indefinitely by a daily dose of a certain drug, whose name can be shortened to alseroxylon. When this drug was
comes to the Senate meeting for' Society's "self-glorification reasons." 1 making crime
Noon Readings To Feature H. L. Mencken’s Autopsy
II L. Mencken’s “Roosevelt: An Autopsy” will be read at today's noon readings by Dr. Harold Briggs, professor of English.
Today's reading, to l»e held in 129 FH. is the eighth in a series n( t^n programs sponsored by the SC English department un-der the direction of Dr. Bruce
R. McEMerry.
Henry Louis Mencken, a native of Baltimore. Md.. was n noted journalist, serving as a reporter on tl»e liallunore Morning 1 leraid and later as cily editor for the same paper.
He served as editor of the Evening Herald from 1905 to 1906 and on ihe sialf of the Baltimore Sun for many years.
Mencken was a prominent literary critic as well as editor of American Mercury magazine and a contributing editor for The Nation, another periodical.
He was awarded a gold medal for his criticisms and essays by the National Institute and Acad
emy of Arts and Letters. dent of the United States and
Mencken was the author of often remembered for his work countless literary works, among j in conservation and trust-bust-which are “The Philosophy of ing.
Fredrich Nietzsche.” “The Art-
i been conducting an investiga-| tion of hypertension on research j grants, one of which is from the U.S. Public Health Serv ice.
The doctors have definitely concluded that there is a hered-! itary factor in hypertension and | that the characteristic changes of blood pressure in spontane-
ously hypertensive animals are for his book “The American similar to the normal rabbit
Language," which is considered population.
by many to be a classic as far "These findings would indi-
cate that spontaneously hyper- I
inal lot selected for high blood ! discontinued after two months
; or a year of treatment, the Average Higher pressures went up to control
“The average pressure of the (hypertensive) levels or above
colony has been consistently tvv ‘ ¡n a week._____________________________
higher than that of ordinary rabbit population," Dr. Drury stated.
“Direct pressures are sometimes made using intra-arlerial puncture but routine pressures are measured by the direct method, using cuff and syphg-momanometer”—a standard instrument for measuring blood
showed were rapidly forgotten or traded for copies of the “earlier
edition.”
Real Surprise
“We had no idea that the plan would have worked so perfectly,” Lichty said .“There was no trouble at ail and no one seemed to know just what was happening.”
With the administration’s and student body's unanimous approval, the stunt was picked up by wire services, newspapers and radio television stations all over the country. ________________________
SC Needn't Fear Federal interference, Says Topping
University President Norman said, “that this bill is not a take up teaching as a career.
H. Topping said today that SC, scholarship, but a loan.” "There is a proviso in the bill
Many scientists have held the , as a private institution, need not The loans will be made to stu- wjj| refund practising teach-
(car the new “installment plan" dents at low <3 ^ ,“at’ Hers 10 per cent of their loan each
that Congress has passed to help terest rates. The Federal L»ov-|
for about seven or eight
pressure
------
as the English language is con- cate that spontaneously hyper-
sidered. i tensive rabbits have character- I belief that hjpei tension is a
The selection which Professor istics in common with man in ! genetic factor, hut their theory _
y Briggs will read today concerns his development of essential hy-| lacked proof until these rabbits students meet their college ex- ernment will contribute 90 per year, for about 1- Theodore Roosevelt 26th presi- pertension,” Dr. Drury conclud- "ere studied. penses. cent of the capital for these , years, he said.
— - * * ” ' ' —'1----......1 However, Dr, Topping pointed
out that the plan will not be re-
ed.
ist," “A Book of Burlesques,” and “A Book of Prefaces.” More of his works include “Making a President," “In Defense of Women.’’ “Ventures
“Roosevelt: An Autopsy” was written in 1926, during the middle of Mencken’s literary career.
Mencken was born in 1880 and died just two years ago. He was
into Verse," “Note on Democ- educated in Baltimore’s private racy." and “Newspaper Days.” schools and attended Baltimore Mencken is perhaps best-known i Polytechnic.
Stock Rabbits “In 1951 we found that occasional stock rabbits supplied us by rabbitries had definitely
higher arterial pressure than the average rabbit population,” Dr. Drurv explained.
Dr. Alexander’s first 85 rab- SC, he says, will soon begin funds: the university will give
bits showed an incidence of ele- participating in this plan under the remaining 10 per cent.
vated systolic pressure at four months of age, 30 per cent, and of 70 per cent at eight months.
Two additional generations born in 1954 showed an incidence of 50 per cent at four “We mated two such animals I months and To per cent at eight 3nd found elevated pressures in ¡months.
several of the offspring. This I In the newer generations the led us to screen rabbits in the males showed a higher pressure : sonnel.
stock producers with the view \ than the females. These males I “It should be emphasized," he
Defense Education Act of 1958. | Although the selection of stu-This legislation allows students dents for loans will be left to
to pay for their college tutition in monthly installments.
Dr. Topping said that acceptance of the act will not give to the government any policy control over the university’s curriculum, administration or per-
the university, the bill asks that special consideration be given to students with a superior academic background who express a desire to teach in elementary or secondary schools.
Dr. Topping said he felt that “Congress’s thinking” in the bill
stricted to students majoring in education only. He said that the bill will not overlook high school students, who are college material, that are denied college liecnuse they lack the necessary funds.
Graduate and undergraduarr students already attending SC will also be eligible for the bills
; was to encourage students to j benefits.